According to product literature the Synthasystem modular system "can be configured to the customer's specifications, and can be expanded to any size desired." Each module was 15 cm tall and had a unit width of 4.5 cm. Most of the modules have circuit boards which are double sided and mounted parrallel to the front panel, unlike other modular systems which are usually mounted perpendicular to the the front panel. The modules use descrete components (ie. no chips).

The standard system came in a a cabinet approximately 22inches (57cm) wide and 18.5 inches (48cm) tall with the modules listed below. The top row, containing Sequencer, Frequency Divider and Voltage Controlled Phaser, was optional and is replaced by a blank panel on some units.

This Frequency Divider module feature two 4-octave switches and one 6-position divider switch dividing the frequency by 3, 5, 7, 9, 11 or 15. There are three octave mix controls as well as an overall mix and output controls.

This module is a Voltage Controlled Oscillator, with knobs for frequency (large knob), fine tune (small knob) and pulse width. There is also 4 knobs to attenuate/mix the output levels of each of the four waveforms (triangle, sine, sawtooth, and pulse. Each waveform has two output jacks each. To control the frequency, there are 3 voltage control inputs and one other variable voltage control input. The variable input has a small screw for adjusting the volts per octave. There are also control inputs for phase reset and for pulse width.

This Voltage Controlled Oscillator is a simpler in design with knobs for frequency, fine tune, output level of sine waveform and output level of the sawtooth waveform. Sine and sawtooth are the only waveforms available with this module. 3 voltage control inputs control the frequency, one of them being variable with a small screw adjusting the volts per octave. There is an additional control input for phase reset.

Simple Voltage Controlled Oscillator with knobs for frequency and level only. There are 2 fixed control inputs and one variable, as well as a phase reset input. This oscillator was probably designed to be used as a control voltage (LFO).

This is a multimode Voltage Controlled Filter which can be switched via a knob to low-pass, high-pass, or band-pass. There are also knobs for Frequency and for Resonance (Q). There are three signal inputs and two signal outputs. For control voltages, there are two inputs, one of them variable.

This is also known as a Ring modulator with an input for the signal, an input for the carier, and an output for the resulting waveform. There is a knob to adjust the amounts of the signal and the carrier and an adjustment screw (CAR. NULL) for finding the null point. There is also a switch between MULT. and SQUARE.

This is a Voltage Control Trigger Generator module with a knob for both duration and rate. There are buttons for Gate and Manual, as well as a RUN switch. There are voltage control inputs for rate, duration, and triger gate. There are 4 trigger outputs.

"Steiner Parker Envelopes are quite unique. Envelopes 1 & 2 are ADS/ADSR. ADS or ADSR determined by the DAMP switch. Envelope 3 is more complex. It can be either ASD/ASDR or ATD/ATDR (T=Time). Time or Sustain is determined by the EXT switch. Also note that time/sustain segment is before decay.

"The DAMP feature on Env 1 & 2 dampens the release time. With Damp off, the decay time is also the release time. With Damp on the release time is supposed to be turned off. This is similar to the minimoog's release on/off (in reverse), but the damp doesn't work perfectly, so with full decay (about 8 seconds) you get about 1/3 second release time.

"The QTN feature on Env 1 & 2 effects how the envelope responds to a short gate time. With QTN on the Env switches from the attack segment to the decay segment upon release of a note, the decay segment runs from that level. With QTN off the attack segment always completes its full cycle time before the decay then runs its full cycle.

"The EXT feature of ENV 3 determines whether the Duration Time is a fixed
duration set by the knob (up to about 3 seconds on mine) or if the Duration Time matches the incoming gate signal.

"The COM. feature on the right side of Env 2 & 3 determines whether the
envelope trigger input comes from the respective trigger inputs 2 & 3 or
from the Com. 1 trigger input.

"The COM. feature on the left side of Env 2 & 3 determines whether the
envelope output goes to the respective output 2 & 3 or to the Com. 1 output. This allows you to layer envelopes to the same destination without an external CV mixer."